Wagner v. Hatcher

125 S.W. 1063, 137 Ky. 406, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 9, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 1063 (Wagner v. Hatcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Hatcher, 125 S.W. 1063, 137 Ky. 406, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 584 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion or the Court by

Wm. Rogers Clay, Commissioner

— Affirming.

On the 26th day of February, 1892, T. B. Scott purchased from one Meyer Schamburg a certain tract of land in Pike county, Ky., and received a conveyance therefor. On June 4, 1892, Scott and wife sold and conveyed this land to T. P. ‘Wagner. Before these sales A. J. Auxier and James M. York, on the 18th day of June, 1890, instituted a suit against Meyer Schamburg and others for a debt due them. They procured orders of attachment against the property of the defendants in that action. The defendants owned two tracts of land. Auxier and York obtained judgment for their debt at the January, 1899, term of the Pike circuit court, sustaining their attachment and decreeing a sale of the two tracts of land to satisfy the judgment. The two tracts in question were sold on March 20, 1899, and purchased by J ames Hatcher. The sale was approved by the court, both tracts were conveyed to Hatcher, and he was awarded a writ of possession. Neither Scott, Wagner, nor the latter’s wife was- a party or privy to this action. Thereupon Wagner instituted suit against James Hatcher to cancel the deed to him in so far as it embraced the land purchased by Wagner, and to quiet his title to same. On the trial of that case it appeared that the attachment was levied by delivering a copy to J. II. Leslie and posting a copy on J. [408]*408H. Leslie’s land. The tract in controversy was situated about one-half mile from the land on which the copy of the attachment was posted. The lower court, therefore, held that the levy of the attachment was not sufficient to create a lien upon the tract in controversy which would affect a subsequent purchaser, lessee, or incumbrancer. Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of Wagner. On appeal to this court the judgment was affirmed. Hatcher v. Wagner, 120 Ky. 603, 87 S. W. 778, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 1016. After the judgment in the above action was affirmed by this court, Wagner and his wife instituted this action against Hatcher for damages for unlawfully depriving them of the possession of their land during the pendency of the action above referred to. The action was instituted at common law, but by consent was iransferred to equity. The court awarded the Wagners damages in the sum of $5. From that judgment they have appealed.

The various grounds for .recovery set out in the petition are as follows: (1) Hatcher took possession of about six acres of land outside the boundary of land which he claimed to have purchased and for which he was awarded a writ of possession, and kept appellants out of the possession and use of it for three years. Its rental value was $100 per year. On this item appellants sought a recovery of $300. (2) Hatcher took possession of 12 acres of clover, also outside the boundary of land which he claimed to Lave purchased, tore down the fence, and let stock of the neighborhood run on the clover and destroy it. This resulted in a loss of $200. (3) Hatcher took possession of a certain field within the boundary claimed to have been purchased by him, and withheld the possession thereof from appellants for three [409]*409years, to their damage in the sum of $135. (4) While Hatcher was claiming the land, appellants -sold a part of it to James Clark, but, because of Hatcher’s claim, Clark refused to pay for it. Clark was sued by Hatcher for taking timber from the land, and appellants had to defend this suit at a cost of $300. (5) Just before Hatcher took possession of the land a large amount of timber growing on it was killed by fire. Appellants made preparation to take it to market before it became damaged, but Hatcher interfered, claimed the land, and threatened to sue them if the timber was taken off; thus preventing them from doing so, and it became a total loss. The timber was worth $1,500. . (6) Appellants were preparing to clear for cultivation a portion of the land consisting of about 12 acres, and Hatcher prevented this for three years, which damaged them in the sum of $300. (7) After Hatcher had purchased and obtained a deed for the land, appellants were forced to prosecute a suit against, him to cancel his deed and quiet their title. For this purpose they employed counsel and paid them $385. It cost them $500 in money and time to prosecute the suit and protect their land agaiust Hatcher’s unfounded claim. This loss was the result of Hatcher’s unfounded claim, as he had no reasonable grounds to believe that he was the owner of the land.

These claims for damages were paragraphed as above set out. Hatcher demurred to each paragraph of the petition, and it was sustained to the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh paragraphs, and overruled as to the first and second. Thereupon appellants amended their petition. Hatcher then de-' rnurred to each paragraph of the amended petition. It was overruled as to the first, second, third, and fifth [410]*410paragraphs, sustained to the fourth and sixth paragraphs, and to - all that part of the seventh paragraph which sought to recover the sums paid to attorneys. The demurrer was overruled-as to the claim for expenses in prosecuting the suit. Thereafter Hatcher filed an' answer, in which he admitted taking possession of the land, but claimed that it was merely formal, and that it was not detained from appellants for a single day. The answer also contains a denial of the allegations in the various paragraphs to which the demurrer had not been sustained.

The facts developed from the record are as follows : After the purchase of the tract of land out of which this action grows, appellee Hatcher obtained a writ of possession for the land in the action of Auxier and York against Schamburg and others. That writ was issued in the following manner: .Hatcher, in Company with the sheriff and one or two others, went to the land. The sheriff laid the fence down in two places. Thereupon Hatcher rented the land to one Mont Hatfield, who occupied a tract of six acres outside of the land in -controversy. No other possession was taken of the land. Wagner testifies that he was not on the land the day the sheriff attempted to deliver possession thereof to Hatcher. When he returned, he found the fences down. The fences were permitted to remain in that condition for' a long time thereafer. He says there were 12 acres of clover and grass taken outside of the writ. The fence was torn down and remained down until the following spring. The clover and grass were destroyed by the neighborhood stock. He further testified that he did not remove the damaged timber from the land in controversy because Hatcher sent him word that he (Hatcher) would send the [411]*411.sheriff out there if Wagner attempted to remove' the timber. Wagner also testified to the possession by Hatcher of the six acres of land outside the writ, and to the rental value of this land. As to ¡he timber damaged by fire, the evidence for Wagner is to the effect that, if the timber had been removed in reasonable time, a large portion of it would have been saved; that, when timber is deadened.by fire, it decreases in value very rapidly thereafter, and if not hauled within two or three years, it is virtually destroyed. The evidence for Hatcher is to the effect that soon after Wagner returned home, and found that the sheriff had attempted to deliver possession to Hatcher, he took a shotgun and ran Hatfield off the place. Thereafter he did exercise possession over the land in controversy and did sell and remove timber therefrom. Instead of the fence, which had been taken down by the sheriff, remaining in that condition, Wagner immediately laid the fence up. Wagner put another tenant in-the house occupied by Hatfield.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 1063, 137 Ky. 406, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-hatcher-kyctapp-1910.